How Good Readers Connect Ideas in a Text

Khan AcademyKhan Academy

This video introduces the critical reading comprehension strategy of making connections between ideas within a text. Using an accessible analogy of a social network where friends are connected in different ways, the narrator explains how sentences and concepts in a passage relate to one another to build a larger meaning. The video transitions from this analogy to a concrete demonstration using a nonfiction passage about the history of shipbuilding. The content focuses on three specific types of text connections: Comparison (identifying similarities and differences), Cause and Effect (understanding how one event leads to another), and Sequence (tracking the order of events). Through a step-by-step close reading of a paragraph about iron versus brass nails in ships, the narrator explicitly models how to identify these structures using textual evidence. For educators, this resource provides a clear, visual model for teaching text structure and close reading. It moves beyond the common "text-to-self" connection strategy to the more rigorous "text-to-text" internal analysis required for higher-level comprehension. It is an excellent tool for introducing informational text structures or for supporting students who struggle to see the "big picture" when reading complex nonfiction.

Related Lessons